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Expanding the role of education in frontotemporal dementia: a functional dynamic connectivity (the chronnectome) study

Authors :
Premi, E.
Cristillo, V.
Gazzina, S.
Benussi, A.
Alberici, A.
Cotelli, M. S.
Calhoun, V. D.
Iraji, A.
Magoni, M.
Cotelli, Maria
Micheli, A.
Gasparotti, R.
Padovani, A.
Borroni, B.
Cotelli Maria
Premi, E.
Cristillo, V.
Gazzina, S.
Benussi, A.
Alberici, A.
Cotelli, M. S.
Calhoun, V. D.
Iraji, A.
Magoni, M.
Cotelli, Maria
Micheli, A.
Gasparotti, R.
Padovani, A.
Borroni, B.
Cotelli Maria
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

In the present study, we aim at investigating whether education modulates dynamical properties of time-varying whole-brain network connectivity (the chronnectome) in frontotemporal dementia (FTD) at a given level of symptom severity. Dynamic connectivity parameters were evaluated in 128 patients with FTD using independent component analysis, sliding-time window correlation, and k-means approach to resting state–magnetic resonance imaging data. We evaluated the relationship between education, a proxy measure of cognitive reserve, and 4 indexes of metastate dynamic connectivity: (1) the number of distinct metastates a patient passes through, (2) the number of switches from one metastate to another, (3) the span of the realized metastates, and (4) the total distance traveled in the state space. We found a significant inverse correlation between years of education and the 4 indexes of metastate dynamic fluidity (all p-values ≤ 0.03, false discovery rate–corrected). This study suggests that patients with FTD with higher education but comparable clinical severity show more global functional brain impairment, suggesting that patients with higher cognitive reserve can cope with more global brain fluidity reduction.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1256810022
Document Type :
Electronic Resource